IOC calls on British government to respect 'autonomy of sport'
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[March 14, 2023]
(Reuters) - Olympic chiefs have urged the British government to
respect the "autonomy of sport" after an attempt to lobby sponsors
against a proposed pathway for Russian and Belarusian athletes to
participate at next year's Paris Games.
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The logo of the Paris candidacy for the 2024
Olympic and Paralympic Games is seen at the entrance of the Le Bourget
exhibition center in Le Bourget, near Paris, May 15, 2017.
REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes |
Britain's Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer last
week wrote a letter to 13 of the biggest Olympic sponsors,
urging them to put pressure on the International Olympic
Committee (IOC) to abandon its proposal.
"It is not up to governments to decide which athletes can
participate in which international competitions. This would be
the end of world sport as we know it today," the IOC said on
Monday.
"We hope very much that the British government will respect the
autonomy of sport ...
"It must be the sole responsibility of sports organisations to
decide which athletes can take part in international
competitions based exclusively on their sporting merit.
"In accordance with this, Olympic sponsors are not involved in
this decision-making process."
The IOC issued sanctions against Russia and Belarus after last
year's invasion of Ukraine but is reluctant to exclude their
athletes from the Olympics entirely for fear of a return to the
boycotts of the Cold War era.
They set out a pathway in January for competitors from Russia
and its ally Belarus to earn Olympic slots through Asian
qualifying and to compete as neutral athletes in Paris.
Neutral athletes are not considered to be representing their
nations and their successes are not accompanied by the flying of
flags or playing of national anthems.
The British government issued a joint statement last month with
34 other nations reiterating a call on the IOC to issue a
blanket ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes from its
competitions.
Ukraine has threatened to boycott the Paris Olympics if athletes
from Russia and Belarus compete.
(Reporting by Aadi Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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